Skip to main content
13 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Oct 12, 2018 at 20:02 comment added wizzwizz4 @YvetteColomb You seem pretty reasonable to me, so I'd go with "what Yvette thinks".
Oct 11, 2018 at 18:23 comment added user3956566 @Houseman I honestly don't know. It's stressful. It's nigh impossible not offending someone with all the personalities and cultural differences on a global site. My motto is, would a reasonable person think this is rude. then the debate starts "what is a reasonable person"
Oct 11, 2018 at 18:13 comment added user773737 @YvetteColomb What are we going to do to work within this new framework? We can provide the owners with quantitative data so that they can make the right decisions by participating in the CE5K. It is my hope that the owners see this data and say "wow, we were completely off-base"
Oct 11, 2018 at 17:58 comment added user3956566 terms. We can give feedback as to some of the nuances. Does that make sense? It's time people accepted the network is not going back on this. We have no choice. So what are we going to do to work within this new framework?
Oct 11, 2018 at 17:57 comment added user3956566 @Houseman it comes across that way. The blog post is not why we're seeing the survey. The blog post is an outward statement coming from the site. The survey is also coming from the site. It's not Jay's blog. He's representing the site. It went through approval processes. It's the entire impetus of change that we're dealing with, not an isolated blog. Rallying against the blog is meaningless. The site has made it's choice. What we can best do is try and negotiate with feedback, for e.g. when the CoC was featured on meta. with surveys like this. They're clearly not allowing us to dictate the...
Oct 11, 2018 at 17:46 comment added user773737 @YvetteColomb Was my comment really "snipey?" I was being sincere...
Oct 11, 2018 at 17:38 comment added Patrick Roberts Maybe they should add the same measures to the comment evaluator that they do to the review queues to make sure you aren't robo-reviewing :P "oops, this comment wasn't actually fine." But they need our data first to determine that.
Oct 11, 2018 at 16:50 comment added user3956566 @Houseman I think it's gone beyond the blog post. Whether the blog post was mismanaged or not, the fact remains, the site was clearly intent on making changes. The blog post was the first public indicator of it. It's like throwing the baby out with the bath water to say "yeh we were always perfect - the blog post sucked!" We had issues. Every site does. Making snipey remarks doesn't help address the issues, what side of the fence you sit on. It just makes people think "give it a rest". If people object to how things are, address it intelligently.
Oct 11, 2018 at 16:47 comment added user3956566 I agree with your answer. If the majority hit fine and a smaller proportion don't always hit fine, it's important to get the statistical significance.
Oct 11, 2018 at 0:38 comment added user773737 @StephenRauch Just think, what if every time you hit "fine", it counted as a rebuttal against Jay Hanlon's blog post?
Oct 10, 2018 at 5:21 comment added Dan Bron @StephenRauch Oh, I totally understand it’s no fun at all for you. That’s what I meant by “a large favor”. You pay, we benefit. Right now, my concern is that comment moderation policy has been shaped by third parties based on small, anecdotal data. I think the costs I’m asking you to bear can help balance that with a perspective of an active participant to generate more statistically significant data. But it’s your choice —- as I say, this is a favor — and it’s completely fair if you don’t want to do it.
Oct 10, 2018 at 5:18 comment added Stephen Rauch Mod I can not disagree with the need to express one's opinion, but an hour of nothing but fine is likely to argggg....
Oct 10, 2018 at 5:13 history answered Dan Bron CC BY-SA 4.0